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Haripur district is located in
Hazara division of North West Frontier Province
(NWFP) of Pakistan. The total area of the
district is 1,725 square kilometers, while the
district houses a total population of 692,228
(83,067 urban and 609,161 rural)1. The average
annual growth rate is 2.2 percent and
district’s population density is 400 persons
per square kilometers1. For every 100 women
there are 99.7 men in the district. Average
household size in the district is 6.6 persons1.
Ghazi and Haripur are two tehsils of the
districts whereas there are 44 union councils
and 880 villages in the district2.
The literacy ratio in the
district accounts to 53.7 percent (males 70.5
percent as against 37.4 percent for females)1.
There are 682 health institutions established
in the district. For every 40,014 people there
is one doctor available in the district while
for 90,031 population there is one nurse2. The
EPI coverage percentage in the district is
73.21. Around 65 percent of the households are
using piped water while the access to water in
far flung rural area is poor. Separate or
shared kitchen, bathroom and latrine are
available in 54.3 percent, 52 percent and 46.7
percent of the housing units respectively1.
There is an acute problem of accessibility to
road infrastructure as on an average there is
0.25 Km road/sq. Km of the district2. About
76.3 percent housing units have electricity
facility while 78.8 percent households use wood
as a source of cooking fuel1. The access of
common people to basic civic facilities and
amenities in the district is quite ironical,
however, the quality of these services are well
below the acceptable standards.
Poverty is prevalent in the
district and is assuming menacing proportions
with the passage of time. Unemployment rate in
the district is 30 percent1. More than 42
percent district’s population lies below
poverty line and 31 percent population belong
to middle-income group that is living hand to
mouth3. Poverty in this context perpetuates due
to ongoing political instability, uneven
distribution of resources, poor human resource
development and polarization of power and
resources in the hands of a small percentage of
population.
The district’s overall
performance on gender empowerment is dismal. A
low investment in (female) human capital,
negative social biases and prejudices,
controversial and discriminatory policies and
laws, restriction on female mobility and the
internalization of patriarchy by women
themselves, has become the basis for gender
discrimination and disparities in all spheres
of life.
Increasing environmental
degradation in Pakistan is a constant threat to
the biological diversity and natural resource
base of the country and is unfavourably
influencing the lives of the poorest sections
of society. The picture in district Haripur is
quite akin with the rest of the country. In
1999-2000, the total area under cultivation was
77,875 hectares and the area under forests was
57,398 hectares2, far below than acceptable
standards. The land use and cropping intensity
were 73.6 percent and 109 percent
respectively2. Average per hectare yield of
major crops such as maize, rice, and wheat is
1,346 kgs, 917 kgs, and 1,526 kgs
respectively2. The agriculture land holding is
less than 2.5 acres per household3. Buffaloes,
cows, sheep, goats are the main sources of milk
and meat and on an average there are 180
buffalo/cattle, 152 sheep/goats per 100
households in the district1. It is worth to
mention that the last few decades have
witnessed increasingly exploitative and
disenfranchising practices including illegal
timber harvesting, deforestation on mountains
and hill sides, rangeland degradation,
over-cultivation, uncontrolled grazing, low
productivity in agriculture and livestock, poor
water resource management and a host of
socio-political factors contributing to the
ecological degradation.
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